We recently published a revised version of our Privacy Statement and Terms & Conditions By using this site, you agree to these revised documents including the use of cookies
to enhance your experience. We kindly ask you to take a few minutes to read and understand them.

Passengers terrified as aircraft door falls off upon landing

Airline insists passenger must have tampered with door

Airline passengers were horrified when the emergency exit door of a flight came off as the aircraft was taxing in Abuja airport on Wednesday.

Dana Air denied that it was caused by a mechanical fault, and said the door could not fall off "without a conscious effort by a passenger to open it".

But one passenger told the BBC that everyone on board had denied tampering with the door.

Some of the passengers took to Twitter to speak about the experience.

Ola Brown wrote “Flew Dana. Exit door was unstable throughout the flight. As we touched down it fell off. Scary stuff.”

Abeg

If there is a class action lawsuit against Dana for gross negligence and endangering the lives of passengers. I want in, I also was on that flight : 25d : The Door Panel was loose indicative of lack of maintenance. pic.twitter.com/TzDWnGboGJ

Dapo Sanwo, another passenger, replied: “If there is a class action lawsuit against Dana for gross negligence and endangering the lives of passengers. I want in, I also was on that flight : 25d : The Door Panel was loose indicative of lack of maintenance.”

Ms Brown said that the door rattled throughout the whole flight. "I just thought it was a screw loose, didn't think it would actually just fall off."

It was really terrible. It was like traveling with a molue in the early 90s. Dana Air needs to carry out a comprehensive audit of her fleet and the maintenance status. If that hatch had opened mid air. We’d have lost cabin pressure, oxygen and surely have gone down. #terrible

Mr Sanwo said: “It was really terrible. It was like traveling with a molue in the early 90s. Dana Air needs to carry out a comprehensive audit of her fleet and the maintenance status. If that hatch had opened mid air. We’d have lost cabin pressure, oxygen and surely have gone down.”

The airline is however insisting that the door fell off because a passenger attempted to open it.

“We wish to state categorically that this could never have happened without a conscious effort by a passenger to open it (exit door),” it said.

Disappointed &gutted by this lie.

1. The plane was taxing towards its final destination.Seatbelts were fastened and no passenger was seated close enough to yank it. 2. Several of us saw the handle dangle downwards and bust open in seconds.Damage control is ok but this is rude

But Mr Sanwo retorted: “The plane was taxing towards its final destination. Seatbelts were fastened and no passenger was seated close enough to yank it. Several of us saw the handle dangle downwards and bust open in seconds. Damage control is ok but this is rude.

If someone tampered with aircraft equipment. That’s terrorism. The passenger seated close to the sign would have been detained. Willful destruction of airline property. This is clearly what it is. A mechanical fault from a degraded plane. #disappointed

“If someone tampered with aircraft equipment. That’s terrorism. The passenger seated close to the sign would have been detained. Willful destruction of airline property. This is clearly what it is. A mechanical fault from a degraded plane.”

In its statement, Dana Air said: "The emergency exit door of our aircraft are plug-type backed by pressure, which ordinarily cannot fall off without tampering or a conscious effort to open by a crew member or passenger.

"When an aircraft is airborne, it is fully pressurised and there was no way the seat or door could have been shaking as insinuated."

The airline said that a thorough inspection of the aircraft was carried out by the airline’s engineers and a team from the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority upon landing and no issue was reported.

Popup

Times of Malta Premium

This article is part of our premium content.You have exceeded your 10 free articles for this month.
A subscription is required to access Times of Malta content from overseas.
Register to get 10 free articles per month.

Subscribe to gain access to our premium content and services. Your subscription will also enable you to
view all of the week's e-paper editions (both Times of Malta and The Sunday Times of Malta), view exclusive
content, have full access to our newspaper archive to download editions from 1930 to today, and access the
website in full from overseas. All of this will also be available to you from our tablet and mobile apps.